Ismo Leikola, Laugh Factory 2014 finals | Reaction!!

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  • Опубліковано 12 гру 2018
  • Our reaction to Ismo Leikola, Laugh Factory 2014 finals
    Original Video: • Ismo Leikola, Laugh Fa...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @mariobnicole8669
    @mariobnicole8669  5 років тому +1

    *➤Leave Your video request here:* bit.ly/2OFp78J
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    *➤Thanks You*

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 5 років тому +1

      I'm Finnish and have understood movie english since i was about 8 or 9, then in school for few years, i even worked as a translator in my twenties. English basics is easy to learn, grammar is quite easy.. until we try to expand it, go into more complex structures and then you can see who is native and who is not. But the most problem by FAR are the exceptions.. Goose, geese, that is a good example. Different pronunciation without logic, rules that are not really that strong.. it is living language and that also makes it harder for "noobs" to get started and will confuse even native speakers for the rest of their lives... It probably needs an overhaul at some point... I mean, even the english english is a mess; cow and beef, pig and pork.. One is on the plate, one is in the pen.

    • @michaelgrabner8977
      @michaelgrabner8977 5 років тому

      English is my second language and it is easy to learn when it comes to grammar... my first language is german and in comparision to german english feels like that grammar simply does not exist..but the hard thing of learning english is the pronouncation respectively the spelling of words..because certain english letters respectively the vowels are pronounced different depending on the position or combination with other letters...in german we don´t have that at all there is one letter = one sound and that´s valid always and for every german word and so therefore the pronouncation is like the spelling...although we have in german silent letters as well but only 2 either the "e" when it is written after an "i" = "ie" (that means that the "i" is then pronounced a bit longer) or in some occasions (but not always) the "h" when it is written after any vowel (which means that the direct previous vowel is pronounced longer as well)...
      But english is simply a hybrid language with old germanic elements which is the basic (old Saxon English) mixed with old Norse vocabulary and old romanic french vocabulary because of the english history where they were occupied by vikings for over 150 years (aD 865-1066) and occupied by the french speaking Normans who solely spoke french for round about 300 years (aD1066 - round about 1337 it is not ecactly to define because it was an assimilation-process which started with the 100 years war against the French 1337 - 1453 where the Normans slowly stopped speaking french and started to speak english because from now on french was seen as enemy´s language) and that had simply an huge impact to the english language that´s why the spelling and the pronouncation of words are so variable depending of their origin. But the Normans had by far the biggest impact and therefore 2/3 of today´s english vocabulary are french based. You would notice that when you learn french although today´s french words are pronounced different but the writing/spelling of those french related english words is still quite similar to the french words.

    •  4 роки тому

      The only thing more useless than making videos like this, is watching them.
      Please get a life, you boring sons of bitches

  • @Kepulikeppi
    @Kepulikeppi 5 років тому +82

    Ismo was pretty funny back in 2014, but his new stuff is funnier, and it's usually about the english language, for example the "ass"-thing.

    • @Smickster01
      @Smickster01 5 років тому +5

      yeah, both the ass and shit jokes were funny.

    • @Gibbetoo
      @Gibbetoo 5 років тому +2

      it is more playing with word's from a foreinger point of view.

  • @VJScope
    @VJScope 5 років тому +28

    To be fair, Finnish is probably top-5 most hardest languages to learn. Might be top-2 because you have to learn it 'twice' because we don't speak like we write.
    Fun reaction guys!

    • @BlackQuillFiend
      @BlackQuillFiend 5 років тому

      And Finnish is related to Hungarian of all languages, 2 unique languages in Europe and i belive mr. Khan had something to do with it

    • @Mr_Seppo
      @Mr_Seppo 5 років тому +1

      You do speak like you wright, thats why its so easy.

    • @Songfugel
      @Songfugel 5 років тому +3

      @@BlackQuillFiend Nah, Khan came waaaaay later. Also while Hungarian and Finnish do share same proto-language, the modern versions of those languages have close to nothing in common anymore.
      Fun fact. Finnish is considered one of the most ancient languages in the World, not that it is one of the oldest language, but due to the fact that it has stayed relatively unchanged for such a long time compared to other languages.

  • @ideeyes4054
    @ideeyes4054 5 років тому +21

    Ismo's "the most important word in English" video/skit is also hilarious

  • @captainbarbossa4062
    @captainbarbossa4062 5 років тому +9

    1. Finnish = a noun, something or somebody from Finland, (language, nationality) also an adjective 2. finish = a verb; to complete, to end

  • @MikaHalonen1974
    @MikaHalonen1974 5 років тому +5

    I love your honesty. I'm from finland and live here. Thank you for this video!

  • @chrisvasquez1064
    @chrisvasquez1064 5 років тому +16

    Hey I liked that guy that was a good skit specially from a guy that's not from here

  • @MrVenne73
    @MrVenne73 5 років тому +7

    Finnish is one of the hardest languages to learn.

  • @jplaakso1251
    @jplaakso1251 5 років тому +3

    "ISMO | Chivalry is Dead" is new and good from Ismo

  • @LauriMajamaa
    @LauriMajamaa 10 місяців тому

    Yeah, we spel Alpha in Finland Alfa. No need for silent letters! 😂

  • @lemonielala3080
    @lemonielala3080 5 років тому +8

    Yup, Ismo really is finnish, and a national treasure (he had a fun bit on english on Conan)! Btw, english is eeeeeasy to learn. Finnish and japanese are actually both in the top five most difficult laguages! You should google finnish grammar sometimes for shiggles! 😂 And I learned it as a second language, not fun! And english is my third language, we started learning that in third grade in school. So age nine, three languages on your curriculum. 👍

  • @jxclxc8830
    @jxclxc8830 5 років тому +2

    Finnish language is good because no silent letters, genders or articles and we don't pronounce same looking letters different ways at different words
    But bad sides of Finnish is endings
    koira = a dog
    koirat = dogs
    koirilta = from the dogs
    koiriin = to the dogs

  • @Benderkekekekekeke
    @Benderkekekekekeke 5 років тому +3

    you pronounced it exactly right ismou legoland

  • @Benderkekekekekeke
    @Benderkekekekekeke 4 роки тому +2

    in finnish alpha is written alfa

  • @juggis0030
    @juggis0030 3 роки тому

    good stuff. greets from fland!

  • @sttonep242
    @sttonep242 5 років тому +2

    *I S I M O L E K A L A*

  • @mikakamppi4826
    @mikakamppi4826 3 роки тому

    "Alpha" is from latin where there is no "f" hence the "ph", just a fun fact :)

  • @Hairysteed
    @Hairysteed 5 років тому +1

    The "ph" mostly appears in words that are of Greek origin

  • @JayTheCursedLegend
    @JayTheCursedLegend 5 років тому

    Hyvä ismo!!! I eat always happy people! In finland it's against law??? Why

  • @timomastosalo
    @timomastosalo 5 років тому +3

    English is very easy language for a learner to get started - words are mostly short, with not many endings. It gets hard then when you need to spcialize, to learn your professional jargon: many Greek, Latin and other educated words coming, which have closely similar every day words, just they are not acceptable in the professional life. You have to show your education with the classic language skills.
    Even the word tongue has mostly been replaced by the word language - but there's still the mother tongue. Mother language means something else:)
    And the English spelling is maybe the hardest in the world, at least of the generally known languages. Usually each language has its exceptional cases, but English has a hoard of them - sometimes feels that's all there is :) Which is not true of course.
    I can't get thoroughly through all the tough cases though, but I thought to go through a few here of which I've been taught, you hear? There were tough and though and their lookalikes, they're a well-known bunch, which some witch has concocted. Then I mean to go head the break a bread with the readers whose eyes can read this without a head ache if they read English all through their childhood, wandering the winding roads through the wild woods and forests on a windy Wednesday eve, and were ever unaware of the forlorn forgotten foreigners who got to try to reign the rules of the English orthography and spelling, whether it rained or the weather was mercifully mild.
    I... eye... might close up now, off to lullaby land I go, aye aye sir and ma'am - bye bye. I'll learn more, by and by. Won't buy all those 'Learn yourself' guides - all their dos and don'ts, wrongs and rights, meeting the mates, meats, mights and shipwrights, and other learning rites. One arguement I'd like to ignite, before retiring for the night: Tho or though, color or colour, night or nite? Or another I'd like you to bother, yorecelph widh: tomato (US) or tomato (UK)?

  • @bearbear4389
    @bearbear4389 4 роки тому

    So, should someone be watching me watching them watching him?

  • @phella
    @phella 5 років тому

    i like gooses

  • @argieStream
    @argieStream 5 років тому +3

    Please react to this legendary Finnish sketch comedy bit
    :
    Studio Julmahuvi - Roudasta Rospuuttoon w/ English subtitles

  • @veli-pekkakultanen2353
    @veli-pekkakultanen2353 5 років тому +2

    English pronounciation is not logical. The AAA should be pronounced öeia , cause in word "Arabia" all a- letters are prounounced differently. (GHOTI can be pronounced FISH). In Finninsh everything is always pronounced the same way. Mathemathics is clear, we use SI - system. So - americans are somewhere near Chinese or Japanese, where every word must have a different mark, or North-Sentinel aboriginals, who measure distance by feet.

  • @gJonii
    @gJonii 4 роки тому +1

    I speak Finnish, Swedish, English and Japanese, and have studied some Russian, Chinese and Latin. English is easily the hardest language to learn among those. Japanese and Chinese have godawful writing system but the language otherwise ain't that bad. But for English the only consistent thing is that it's never ever consistent. The exceptions to exceptions of exceptions run so deep at every level of the language, from just pronouncing words(silent letters, each letter and combinations of letters or even whole words having randomly changing pronounciations) to words from like 5 different language groups coexisting, each with their own inflection rules, to sentence structure, usage of commas and such.
    All other languages I know of have usually fairly consistent rules for how things work. Getting to understand those rules might take time, but after you do, you're done.

  • @FinCrow84
    @FinCrow84 5 років тому

    PLEASE do a reaction about that Ismo Leikola at Conan O'Brian stand up 😂🤣 "..good ass Ismo..." 😁
    EDIT:
    This one ua-cam.com/video/RAGcDi0DRtU/v-deo.html

  • @julesbaumann6560
    @julesbaumann6560 5 років тому +4

    So I've just stumbled on your vid ... so why are you the "main attraction" on the screen? Ismo is funny ... watching you watch him destroys the moment ... To have 13K subscribers, I'm sure your other vids must have some substance, but not this one

  • @dicio4001
    @dicio4001 5 років тому

    English is pretty easy because its a newer language. For that the rules have been standardized a lot better. Sure irregular verbs are a thing like sheep sheep, goose, geese etc but most languages have such.
    Esperanto is arguably the best language to learn as it combines Spanish, English and some bits of other languages.
    Yes true that it depends from what language family is your mother tongue but still English is objectively not the hardest.

    • @shawnlittle9234
      @shawnlittle9234 5 років тому

      So people watching and commenting on a comedian do stand up is a thing ? 🙄

    • @Spetulhu
      @Spetulhu 5 років тому +1

      English isn't the hardest, but also not by any means the easiest. You can get to "bad English" pretty fast but if you really want to sound good and use all the right words there's a boatload of exceptions to the rules you need to know. Could have to do with how it's such a mix of different stuff - Anglo-Saxon, then the Norse invaded, then the Normans invaded, then stuff was borrowed from French (and Latin and Greek for learning). It's an unholy mess of words from different roots trying to use some sort of rules that at least look like they make sense.
      As someone said, English doesn't "borrow" words - it mugs other languages in dark alleys and goes throught their pockets for loose vocabulary.

  • @fullmoonson1
    @fullmoonson1 4 роки тому +4

    I watched this only because of Ismo..this black guy seems to be depressed, or defended of Africa joke.

    • @0mgskillz96
      @0mgskillz96 4 роки тому

      I dont think so, theres nothing offensive about that joke, its said in american black families too, might be that american humor is different from finnish but he still looks more entertained than his wife to me

    • @turo1523
      @turo1523 3 роки тому

      Well i think they both were not so "happy" about the video, i just felt whole time like "Must to Laught" "Must to Smile" didn't seem real at all
      Like people without feelings watching the Ismo video, for real

  • @kakkaohjus
    @kakkaohjus 5 років тому

    recommending Finish comedy classic of "Tonnin Seteli" by Kummeli

  • @formatique_arschloch
    @formatique_arschloch 3 роки тому

    Please stop these reactions. No reactions seen in years.